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Kit (1970): Tomboy Kit wants to race cars for a living but gets no support from her family. Disguising herself as a young man she gets a job on a pit crew, but when she falls in love with a handsome driver she has to choose whether to pursue her dream or her heart. |
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Kit (1970): A Disney animated short about an abandoned puppy raised by a stray cat as part of her litter. |
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Kit (1970): (a.k.a. Caboodle) A gritty biography of legendary American explorer/trapper Kit Carson. So gritty, in fact, that even the film is grainy. As much as tribute to the Desert Southwest as to Kit Carson, the film continues to draw controversy from fur activists. |
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Kit (1970): A fictionalized account of the life of Kit Gracemore, the only woman to fight in the French Foreign Legion. Kit joins up by disguising herself as a man and undergoes the Legion's notoriously punishing training regime. She earns honours for her bravery in battle in war-torn Algeria but is forced to resign in dishonour when her deception is discovered. |
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Kit (1970): Though this work stands on its own as an understated masterpiece, its critical acclaim was quickly overshadowed by that of its sequel, 1971's Kaboodle. The sequel is indisputably the greater film; but this one holds its own rewards for discriminating viewers, and for those who gain points with their pretentious friends by claiming to prefer whatever things the general public overlooks. |
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Kit (1970): A fishing boat comes back to the port. Fishermen are crestfallen, as they have caught only one very little fish. To save face, they fib they have 300 kilo of mackerel on board the boat. In their will to report a success, the port administration decides to pad out the draught. So, the very little fish is grossly exaggerated into tons of belted bonito, then into dolphin and ultimately, into a whale. Which results in celebrations, honors and awards... There, naturally, is no whale. Instead of a brilliant display of an unprecedented success, the white collars make a brilliant display of their unparalleled foolishness. A Bulgarian-made allegory of Communist propaganda. |
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None of the synopses above could possibly be legitimate! |
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I give up! What is the answer? |
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